As ROBOT 6′s fourth-anniversary celebration winds down, they look back at some of their favorite comics of 2012, from "Building Stories" and "Saga" to "Goliath" and "Bandette" to "Life With Archie" and "Hawkeye."

ROBOT 6's Chris Arrant speaks with "Hawkeye" artist David Aja about his time on the critically acclaimed book, his views on original art, idea of creative teams and what his formula is for making a great comic.

The black ops take on Marvel's biggest franchise gets a movie-esque makeover in Marvel NOW! and writer Nick Spencer explains what makes Hawkeye, Agent Coulson and the rest of the "Secret Avengers" tick.

Senior Editor Steve Wacker has taken over CBR's regular Friday column with Marvel Editorial and doubled up on fan questions including hints as to future guest stars in "Hawkeye," "Captain Marvel" team-ups and "Daredevil" comebacks.

We spoke with "Hawkeye" writer Matt Fraction about his plans to donate his sales incentive bonuses from January's issue #7 to the Red Cross' Hurricane Sandy relief effort and how readers can help him meet that goal.

With a much faster pace for Marvel events, Axel Alonso explains how lessons from "AvX" impacted "Age of Ultron" and how Marvel prepares to make solo books big. Plus, exclusive first color pages from "Superior Spider-Man."

This week, Armstrong has an Archer on his shoulder, Silk Spectre goes on a trip, the Lookouts strike a pose, Elle (and the Big Bad Wolf) get the Mucha treatment and Clint Barton brushes up on his archery.

Matt Fraction explains what readers can expect from "Hawkeye," his and artist David Aja's urban adventure series following the exploits of Clint Barton when he's not battling world-threatening evil with the Avengers.

Following the release of a mobile game teaser image, Marvel has released a new trailer for an unknown game featuring Nick Fury's activation of the Avengers Initiative after a mass super-villain escape from the Vault.

This week Hazmat blows her top, Matt and Foggy go their separate ways, Nick Fury takes aim, the Beasts of Burden cast a creepy shadow, and Clint Barton shoots an arrow into the air (it falls to earth he knows not where).